Blood Donation

Hello a little topic that has nothing to do with nutrition, but could be important.
In the summer months when people start motorcycling and doing outdoor sports most accidents happen, and in summer fewer people are donating blood.
Now i hope everyone here is healthy and all relatives stay healthy and no one needs an operation, there are people who do and people whos life depend on blood.

So i guess Grok used to bleed sometimes. Wrestling Tigers and so. As there are fewer tigers to fend off we can combine the act with a good reason and the good feeling of doing good.

Just a reminder that coconut water is a really good rehydrator after blood donation.

This ^^ and also that it's very important to pre-hydrate before your donation especially if you are in a hot climate right now. If you are at all dehydrated going in, it can make it hard for them to find a vein and keep things flowing right.

This ^^ and also that it's very important to pre-hydrate before your donation especially if you are in a hot climate right now. If you are at all dehydrated going in, it can make it hard for them to find a vein and keep things flowing right.

I agree. I was not able to donate enough blood to be used as a donation once because I was not hydrated enough. They still use it for other purposes, but now I make an effort to hydrate well for 24 hours or so before I go in.

The blood bank has put me on deferral a couple of times for visiting Africa and the South Pacific. That's a valid concern about malaria.

The Europe concern is about mad cow disease and they only refuse you if you have spent time that adds up to five or more years there, not just a vacation in Paris. And not all returning service members are put on deferral, only those who have been in one of those spots where there is a concern such as malaria or mad cow.

Your info on the caner part is off. It is one year post treatment. That is to give your system time to clear out all the drugs. I don't think that's unreasonable and you really wouldn't feel up to it any sooner anyway.

I'm not sure how I feel about the gay part. There is a valid concern that there is a statistically greater chance of having HIV if you are gay but then again they test everybody's blood for HIV before giving it to anyone so they would hopefully catch any cases that did come up.

I had to look up haemochromatosis and I'm really sorry that you have that condition but, as nice a person as I know you are, I wouldn't want to be on the receiving end of a blood donation from you. Sorry.

I would gladly accept blood donated from a hemochromatosis donor. It's not a blood-borne or contagious disease.

Pre-primal I donated every 8 weeks for about two years before I was deferred due to low hemoglobin. Turns out my iron stores (ferritin) were depleted. I've since started giving blood but on a less-regular basis. I bet now with the amount of red meat I eat and the lack of grains I could go back to giving more often.